48 NEL FACE POWDER ..... : j !(,: t!!?: ( ';::::,':>'or: . ::::':':i;L: :. . t ; t: W ; ";::: .:..t ..::.... :5$'1' . /?7 .:: t:eø ' L';;it;:; :::; .:.:...".. '-:. Thrilling, super-fìne texture in these smart shades that glorify natural colorings: Pearl-Translucent, delicately pinkish, for pink-and-white types Gypsy- Dark and radiant, a true gypsy shade Ivory No.1-Pale Ivory, loved by intensely feminine women Ivory No. 2 - Deep Ivory, dramatic, sets off eyes and lips Dusky-Medium shade with gold tones in it, for red-gold types Natural- Very lig ht, for the fairest blondes Southern Tan -Medium shade, with pink tones in it, for peaches-and-cream types Perfumed with Chanel No. 5 and Chanel Gardenia . . .. . $2.00 H N E LINc. TO mok! our F R O "': :t: : Z E N :: ::: ::::::. .rif D A IO rJR IS it ? i : lrj\vãj ' = -.Itl Here's the RECIPE for a Frozen Daiquiri as made at The Havana Club Bar, Havana, Cuba. 2 oz. Havana Club Rum (White), 1 teaspoonful sugar, juice Y2 lime. Shake vigorously or mix in electric mixer with fine ice Serve unstrained in champagne glass. For other genuine Cuban ReciPes write w. A. Taylor & Co., 10 Rockefeller Plaza, N. Y. City Sole Agents for U. S. A... . Importers since 1888 I W L\.NDERED around the room and talked to some of the interpreters. One young woman told me she was having 3 wonderful time at her work; it made her feel useful. "1' m pure .Ameri- can," she said, "but I went to a lot of schools in Europe when I was young- er-Switzerland, Monte Carlo, France, everywhere." A minute later she add- ed that she had neglected to include a Japanese settlement school in California -li. which she had attended long enough to pick up the language. I asked her if ny Japanese people had come in look- ing for information, and she said, "Not yet, darn the luck." .,A.nother young woman was sorting cards in a green file case. After first forming the sen- "!Thq) tence silently with her lips, she said, "1 @ am Turkish-born and in Holland live." She told me she was embarrassed to ha ve to grope for words in speaking English. She was in New York when Germanyinvaded the Netherlands. Now she spends most of her time at the Red iht:;.X.;;: ";i; ;: :;::. ; :::>-,Æ Cross building. She hesitates to say what she thinks of the Germans, and par- ticularly of "the small man with the droll mustache." A tall, grim man with gray hair walked in to the room, nodded to the workers, and sat down at a vacant table. I asked one of the women interpreters who he was. "That gentleman is a Ger- man baron," she said proudly. "'Ve did have a Balkan princess, but she disap- peared. Just disappeared in to thin air." The Baron, I learned, had been an ambassador to one of the South Ameri- can countries in the last days of the Ger- man Republic and had had an efficient and summary method of dealing with the upstart Nazis. Whenever a Na- zi started poking around his office, the Baron just had an attaché throw him out. This finally got on Hitler's nerves, and the Baron decided in 1936 to come to America. I went over to watch him conduct an interview. A young man was of Poland, who, I was told, IS one of the most faithful volunteers. ",=:,:- : i;:1 SEPTEMDER 1 +, 19 +0 'i%. ;j ' r ;:-,.y' . :? ) t: >:\:f.f . ..:.;(t . :< ;".;::: .. Wf::: [ } ':t} A:: ,.............. f' ::' <;'S . m: : i . :'::::Wii .J' i" r . ; . i . :! . ;. . .::::i '2 . . 1 . "".,' ......i;: "<< .. .-- .:.:.:;: :::. '. . .\:'"'::;: . (;: , :::.,.:: . :: . :: . ::.::,:: .:,& tA i: ;::/:'\' " "-::;. (\ì t ;l. 'ß': . :: : '1k; ' ThE Town fiOU.J'E 108 EAST 38th STREET Just off Park AvetJuc O d . . fied 1\[URRA Y HILL. Charm- n 19n1 ß .h ing suites of I to 5 rooms, son: e Wit fir e p laces complete kltchens. terraces, , . d . rooms Restaurant, solanum. resslng . . . .. Rentals from $70 include maid service. . b d artments 01 1 to 3 Also furnJs e kl;P and monthly rates. rooms at w. ee d 1 M UZ AK Wue or N.A.Berwin & Co 1m; 103 Park Aut-nut Âshland 4-8\00